RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Value of Security Selection versus Asset Allocation in Credit Markets JF The Journal of Portfolio Management FD Institutional Investor Journals SP 11 OP 27 DO 10.3905/jpm.1999.319759 VO 25 IS 4 A1 Lev Dynkin A1 Peter Ferket A1 Jay Hyman A1 Erik van Leeuwen A1 Wei Wu YR 1999 UL https://pm-research.com/content/25/4/11.abstract AB In this article, the authors quantify the relative merits of different styles of credit investing in a limiting ideal case. For portfolios of credit spread securities managed relative to fixed-income benchmarks, they investigate the value added by security selection and various asset allocation strategies based on “perfect foresight.” In conducting their historical study, they rely on the simulation of such strategies using data for the Lehman Brothers U.S. High Grade Corporate Index. Simulations of given strategy are matched to the index in every dimension but one. The success of each strategy is evaluated on the basis of the “information ratio” a ratio of the strategy's outperformance of the index to the standard deviation of such outperformance. The author's findings suggest that security selection with “perfect foresight” in a corporate bond portfolio is the single most effective way to generate steady outperformance of the index. This applies to both the “select winners” and the “avoid losers” cases. Yield curve timing, sector rotations, and credit rating selections may deliver more outperformance, but with higher variance. Results obtained in this study may be used to justify selection of bottom-up versus top-down portfolio management styles and allocation of research efforts and risk budgets.